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Impact of non-idealities and integrator leakage on the performance of IR-UWB receiver front endNavineni, Tharakaramu January 2012 (has links)
UWB has the huge potential to impact the present communication systems due to its enormous available bandwidth, range/data rate trade-off, and potential for very low cost operation. According to FCC, Ultra Wideband (UWB) radio signal defined as a signal that occupies a bandwidth of 500 MHz or fractional bandwidth larger than 20% with strict limits on its power spectral density to -41.3dBm/MHz in the range 3.1GHz to 10.6GHz. Decades of research in the area of wide-band systems have lead us to new possibilities in the design of low power, low complexity radios, comparing with existing narrowband radio systems. In particular, impulse radio based ultra wideband (IR-UWB) is a promising solution for short-range radio communications such as low power radio-frequency identification (RFID), wireless sensor network's and wireless personal area network (WPAN) etc. Since a simple circuit, architecture adopted in the IR-UWB system, the non-idealities of receiver front end may lead to degrade the overall performance. Therefore, it is important to study these effects in order to create robust and efficient UWB system. However, majorities of recent studies are formed on the channel analysis, rather than the receiver system. The main objectives of this thesis work are, (a) System level modeling of non-coherent IR-UWB receiver, (b) Performance analysis of IR-UWB receiver with the help of bit error rate (BER) estimation, (c) A study on the impact of receiver front end non-idealities over BER, (d) Analysis of charge leakage in integrator and its effect on overall performance of UWB receiver. In this work, IR-UWB non-coherent energy detector receiver operating in the frequency band of 3GHz-5GHz based on the on-off keying (OOK) modulation was simulated in Matlab/Simulink. The effect of receiver front end non idealities and integrator charge leakages were discussed in detail with respect to overall performance of the receiver. The results show that non idealities and leakage degrade the performance as expected. In order to achieve a specific BER of 10-2 with the integrator leakage of 25%, the SNR should be increased by 2.1 dB compared to the SNR with no leakage at a data rate of 200Mbps. Finally, integrator design and its specifications were discussed.
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Investigation of AC electrical machine stators with fractional conductor windingsGrop, Henrik January 2010 (has links)
Industry always searches the least expensive solution for a machine design. Therefore, there is a need for integrating different customer ordered machines within the same frame, while keeping the foundation of the mechanical design constant. Since the winding design in electrical machines is essential for the performance and relatively inexpensive to adapt, it can be used to meet different customer demands. This thesis investigates the foundations of a special winding named fractional conductor winding. An expression for winding factors for certain kinds of these windings is developed. Calculations showed that the selection of the winding distribution has effect on the air gap space harmonics produced by the winding. In some cases, the fifth and seventh space harmonics can be eliminated by the use of fractional conductor windings in combination with short pitching. The construction of a prototype fractional conductor wound induction motor was documented and is presented in this thesis. The air gap flux density in a dual slotted fractional conductor wound induction motor running at no load is studied. Analytical models are compared to results obtained by finite elements and measurements. It was found that analytical results overestimated the peak of the fundamental flux density by 13.5%. The overestimation was caused by the iron reluctance of the main flux path as well as saturation. Leakage was found to be a minor cause of this overestimation. Slot leakage and differential leakage in machines having these windings are studied. The analytical models were evaluated, with mostly good agreements, compared to finite element modeling as well as measurements. / QC 20100427
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How will a newly established shopping centeraffect an already existing in the same marketareaCase study: Mall of Scandinavia and Kista Galleria / Hur påverkar ett nyetablerat köpcentrum ettredan befintligt inom samma marknadsområde Fall studie: Mall of Scandinavia och Kista GalleriaArwidsson, Jacob, Malmström, David January 2014 (has links)
No description available.
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Combating Data Leakage in the CloudDlamini, Moses Thandokuhle January 2020 (has links)
The increasing number of reports on data leakage incidents increasingly erodes the already low consumer confidence in cloud services. Hence, some organisations are still hesitant to fully trust the cloud with their confidential data. Therefore, this study raises a critical and challenging research question: How can we restore the damaged consumer confidence and improve the uptake and security of cloud services? This study makes a plausible attempt at unpacking and answering the research question in order to holistically address the data leakage problem from three fronts, i.e. conflict-aware virtual machine (VM) placement, strong authentication and digital forensic readiness. Consequently, this study investigates, designs and develops an innovative conceptual architecture that integrates conflict-aware VM placement, cutting-edge authentication and digital forensic readiness to strengthen cloud security and address the data leakage problem in the hope of eventually restoring consumer confidence in cloud services.
The study proposes and presents a conflict-aware VM placement model. This model uses varying degrees of conflict tolerance levels, the construct of sphere of conflict and sphere of non-conflict. These are used to provide the physical separation of VMs belonging to conflicting tenants that share the same cloud infrastructure. The model assists the cloud service provider to make informed VM placement decisions that factor in their tenants’ security profile and balance it against the relevant cost constraints and risk appetite.
The study also proposes and presents a strong risk-based multi-factor authentication mechanism that scales up and down, based on threat levels or risks posed on the system. This ensures that users are authenticated using the right combination of access credentials according to the risk they pose. This also ensures end-to-end security of authentication data, both at rest and in transit, using an innovative cryptography system and steganography.
Furthermore, the study proposes and presents a three-tier digital forensic process model that proactively collects and preserves digital evidence in anticipation of a legal lawsuit or policy breach investigation. This model aims to reduce the time it takes to conduct an investigation in the cloud. Moreover, the three-tier digital forensic readiness process model collects all user activity in a forensically sound manner and notifies investigators of potential security incidents before they occur.
The current study also evaluates the effectiveness and efficiency of the proposed solution in addressing the data leakage problem. The results of the conflict-aware VM placement model are derived from simulated and real cloud environments. In both cases, the results show that the conflict-aware VM placement model is well suited to provide the necessary physical isolation of VM instances that belong to conflicting tenants in order to prevent data leakage threats. However, this comes with a performance cost in the sense that higher conflict tolerance levels on bigger VMs take more time to be placed, compared to smaller VM instances with low conflict tolerance levels. From the risk-based multifactor authentication point of view, the results reflect that the proposed solution is effective and to a certain extent also efficient in preventing unauthorised users, armed with legitimate credentials, from gaining access to systems that they are not authorised to access. The results also demonstrate the uniqueness of the approach in that even minor deviations from the norm are correctly classified as anomalies. Lastly, the results reflect that the proposed 3-tier digital forensic readiness process model is effective in the collection and storage of potential digital evidence. This is done in a forensically sound manner and stands to significantly improve the turnaround time of a digital forensic investigation process. Although the classification of incidents may not be perfect, this can be improved with time and is considered part of the future work suggested by the researcher. / Thesis (PhD)--University of Pretoria, 2020. / Computer Science / PhD / Unrestricted
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Att leva med överaktiv blåsa : En kvalitativ intervjustudie / How to live with overactive bladder : A qualitative interview studyGustafsson, Ninni January 2020 (has links)
Bakgrund: Av den vuxna befolkningen i världen lever omkring 12 % med överaktiv blåsa (ÖAB) med en tydlig prevalensökning över 44 år. ÖAB definieras som akuta, täta urinträngningar med eller utan inkontinens och innebär en förlust av de första varnande signalerna från blåsan. ÖAB ses som en tyst sjukdom då kvinnor undviker att söka vård. Syfte: Belysa hur det dagliga livet påverkas av överaktiv blåsa hos kvinnor. Metod: Semistrukturerad intervju med kvalitativ innehållsanalys användes. Resultat: Kvinnor hanterar ÖAB genom att planera dagen efter toalettillgång. De undviker vätska före aktiviteter, begränsar mängd alkohol samt tömmer blåsan i förebyggande syfte för att minska risken för akuta trängningar och läckage. Vid genomförande av fysisk aktivitet utformas den efter blåsans förmåga. Aktiviteter och rörelsen som medför läckage undviks av kvinnor med ÖAB. Kvinnor som sökt vård för problematiken upplevde sig få ett negativt bemötande av sjukvårdspersonalen vilket också leder till att de slutar söka vård. Slutsats: Kvinnor med ÖAB bildar en vardag efter blåsan och planerar dagen efter blåsans behov att tömmas. Sjukvårdspersonalens bemötande till kvinnor med ÖAB bör ändras för att kvinnorna ska få känna en ökad acceptansnivå till sitt tillstånd. Det leder således till bättre behandlings- och hanteringsmöjligheter för de drabbade kvinnorna. / Background: Of the adult population, worldwide, live about 12 % with overactive bladder (OAB) with a clear prevalence increase over the age of 44. OAB is defined as acute, frequent urination with or without incontinence which means an absence of the first warning signals from the bladder. OAB is seen as a silent decease, because women avoid seeking care. Aim: To illustrate how daily life is affected by overactive bladder in women. Method: Semi-structured interview with qualitative content analysis was used. Result: Women manage OAB by planning their day after toilet access. They avoid drinking before activities, limit the amount of alcohol and empty the bladder for preventive purposes to reduce risk of acute urgency and leakage. When performing physical activity, it´s designed after the ability of the bladder. Activities that cause leakage are avoided by women with OAB. Women who have sought care for the problem, received a negative response from the healthcare staff, which also leads them to stop seeking care. Conclusion: Women with OAB form their daily life after the bladder and are planning the day after the bladder needs to be emptied. The healthcare staff's treatment of women with OAB should be changed so that women can feel an increased level of acceptance of their condition. It leads to better treatment and management options for the affected women.
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An In vitro Study of Bacterial Leakage of a Novel Implant Abutment InterfaceKabbash, Salma Mohamed Khalifa January 2020 (has links)
Magister Scientiae Dentium - MSc(Dent) / Background: The two-stage implant system has proven to be a successful technique in replacing missing teeth (Nascimento et al., 2008). Nevertheless, the presence of micro-gaps that could entrap microbes at the implant-abutment interface (IAI) is unavoidable. This microbial leakage has been considered as one of the causes of peri-implant infection and bone loss (Scarano et al., 2005). Several companies have attempted to manufacture an implant with a connection design that provides hermetic sealing against bacterial leakage. Studies indicated that implants with internal connection, in particular the conical (Morse taper) design, have better sealing capacity in the implant abutment interface than the external design (Koutouzis et al., 2011, Jaworski et al., 2012). An internal conical implant system with a novel connection design, known as the Grand Morse (GM) connection, is reported to offer secure connection against micro-leakage (Neodent® Implant Systems Inc., 2018).
Aims: The aim of this study was to test the sealing ability against bacterial leakage in the implant-abutment interface provided by an implant with a novel deep internal conical (GM) connection design.
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Structural Analysis of CO2 Leakage Through the Salt Wash and Little Grand Wash Faults from Natural Reservoirs in the Colorado Plateau, Southeastern UtahWilliams, Anthony P. 01 May 2004 (has links)
The Little Grand Wash fault and the Salt Wash Graben in the Colorado Plateau of southeastern Utah emit CO2 gas from abandoned drillholes, springs, and a hydrocarbon seep. Similar CO2-charged water has also been emitted in the past, as shown by large localized travertine deposits and veins along and near the fault traces. The faults cut natural CO2 reservoirs and provide an excellent analog for geologic CO2 sequestration. The faults cut a north-plunging anticline of rocks consisting of siltstones, shales, and sandstones from the Permian Cutler Formation through the Cretaceous Mancos Shale. The Little Grand Wash fault has 260 m of throw and the stratigraphic separation across the Salt Wash Graben is 50 m. The fault rocks in the damage zone show hundreds of fractures, which decrease in density farther away from the faults. In specific areas, fractures with the presence of calcite mineralization indicate fluid migration and bleach zones from a few millimeters to 30 cm. This is evidence of past fluid migration directly associated with the fault zone. Calcite mineralization fills these fractures and is also deposited in a variety of other bed forms. Foliated fault gouge, 5 to 20 cm thick, forms clay smear structures with a scaly shear fabric in a zone l0 to 15 cm thick is seen in the fault core. The leakage is constrained to the footwalls of the northernmost faults throughout the area. Clay-rich gouge structures should be effective barriers to cross-fault flow . Well log, surface geologic, and geochemical data indicate that the CO2 reservoirs have been cut by the faults at depth, providing a conduit for the vertical migration of CO2 to the surface, but not for horizontal flow across the fault plane. Even though lateral cross-fault migration may be impeded, this study clearly indicates that there are possible migration pathways for the escape of CO2 from faulted subsurface aquifers, including aquifers faulted by "low-permeability" faults with clay gouge. Three-dimensional flow models show how the fault's maximum permeability in the damage zone is parallel to the faults, and the leakage though the damage zone is localized near the fold axis of the regional anticline. Direct dating of the clay in the fault gouge was done by ExxonMobil with 40Ar/39Ar methods, indicating that fault movement occurred between the middle Eocene and the end of the Miocene. During this time, the Colorado Plateau is interpreted to have been experiencing rapid uplift. The middle Jurassic, upper Jurassic, and Cretaceous rocks at the surface have been uplifted approximately 1.8 km since the end of the Eocene. This uplift may have influenced fault movement in the Colorado Plateau and along the Little Grand Wash fault, and Salt Wash and Ten Mile Graben. In evaluating these deep aquifers for CO2 sequestration, careful design and monitoring of the geological structure and stress regimes must be considered to avoid leakage.
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Determining CO2 Storage Potential: Characterization of Seal Integrity and Reservoir Failure in Exposed AnalogsBarton, Daniel Corey 01 December 2011 (has links)
Sequestration of carbon dioxide (CO2) into subsurface porous sandstone is proposed as a method for reducing accumulation of anthropogenic emissions of CO2 into the atmosphere. Natural exposures of reservoir and top-seal pairs in central and southeastern Utah are identified as analogs to proposed CO2 injection targets. Reservoir and top-seal pairs in natural analog exposures are analyzed in tandem to evaluate evidence for paleo-migration of fluids and/or hydrocarbons from the reservoir through the top seal. The San Rafael Swell and Monument Uplift exhibit similar structure and exposures of Jurassic units yet differ in amount and type of host rock alteration due to variable amounts and types of fluids and/or hydrocarbons that migrated along faults and fractures.
Macroscopic scale analysis of each monocline included processing of satellite imagery, and creation of depth contour maps. At the mesoscopic scale, fracture spacing acquired from scanline station measurements identified increased fracture frequency in proximity to major fault zones. At the microscopic scale, percentage of degradation and type of mineralization in pore space were used to verify increased fluid flow in proximity to major fault zones.
Faults with possible intersections with multiple antithetic faults at depth have an increased probability of allowing for upward migration of fluids and/or hydrocarbons along the fault plane and damage zone, effectively bypassing the top sealing formations. Fault leakage potential maps identified areas where seal bypass along major faults would likely occur during sequestration of CO2. The method was validated by identifying potential migration pathways for oil seeps on the Little Grand Wash fault in central Utah. The San Rafael Swell was geometrically modeled through restoration of eroded formation tops along the fold axis to quantify the interaction between an outward migrating CO2 plume and varying degrees of faulting and fracturing. Analysis of the migration of a CO2 plume front through time exhibits an increasing probability of the outward migrating plume intersecting a leaking feature, with the highest probability of the advancing plume intersecting a potentially leaking feature achieved when faults with 1+ km trace length and mean fracture spacing of 17 cm are taken into consideration. (177 pages)
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Establishing a methodology to investigate factors that affect Tip Leakage Loss : In a small scale Organic Rankine Cycle (ORC) turbineKaushik, Anand Ashok January 2022 (has links)
With growing awareness and necessity for the world to move towards more sustainable (energy saving) forms of power generation, focus on the commercial use of Organic Rankine Cycle (ORC) turbine systems has subsequently increased in turn. ORC systems with their modular design can thus help in recovering heat, obtained as a byproduct from a variety of industrial processes, and thereby increase their overall system efficiency. As with conventional turbine systems, methods to improve their performance is an avenue that is still being actively researched on today. The various sources of losses in a turbine have thus been looked into, while prioritizing the literature study to factors that result in losses associated with the leakage flow over the blade tip. The purpose of this study is to develop a working methodology to investigate factors that affect the tip leakage loss in a small scale ORC turbine. The model and associated data used for comparison is based on an existing system, whose design has been provided by Againity AB, with the subsequent simulations carried out using Ansys CFX.
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Enhanced anastomotic healing by Daikenchuto(TJ-100) in rats / 大建中湯はラットモデルにおいて吻合部治癒を促進するWada, Toshiaki 23 January 2019 (has links)
京都大学 / 0048 / 新制・課程博士 / 博士(医学) / 甲第21449号 / 医博第4416号 / 新制||医||1032(附属図書館) / 京都大学大学院医学研究科医学専攻 / (主査)教授 妹尾 浩, 教授 松原 和夫, 教授 川上 浩司 / 学位規則第4条第1項該当 / Doctor of Medical Science / Kyoto University / DFAM
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